Entity Management Matters

FEBRUARY 2026

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CORPORATE LAW AROUND THE THE WORLD

The concept of a corporation is the same around the world: shareholders agree to pool resources to create a distinct legal entity in order to achieve a business objective, share the profits and (usually) shield them from liability.
Implementation, however, varies tremendously from one jurisdiction to the other. The big differences in legal systems (e.g. civil law vs. common law) play a role here but mostly this is about contingency.
 
There is no clear, objective reason why annual reports have one name in Arizona and another in Delaware when their contents are almost exactly the same. Similarly there is no reason why the abbreviation for “société à responsabilité limitée” reads “SARL” in France but “Sàrl” in Switzerland.
 
Many of these differences also come down to the vagaries of bureaucratic ingenuity: must you file 3 or 4 copies of your board resolution? Do you need to fill in a form or write a free-form letter? No clear reason there either.
 
Other variations are more fundamental and derive from a government’s attitude to risk: should minority shareholders be protected against the majority? Can tax collectors trust management or should they have a document from the shareholders confirming the entity’s financial results?
 
In many civil law jurisdictions, the answers to these questions are “yes” and “no”, meaning that statutes require shareholders to hold an annual general meeting (AGM) every year to confirm the financial statements. 
 
Whatever the reasons, these variations create a huge headache for multinational corporations handling dozens or hundreds of entities across the world. The corporate secretary and/or General counsel must take stock of the bewildering variety of corporate forms and compliance requirements to come up with a defensible, reliable mechanism for global corporate governance.

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REGULATORY ALERTS

JERSEY: The Companies (Jersey) Amendment Law 2026 was adopted on 21 January 2026 and will come into force on 1 June 2026 or seven days after registration.

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UAE: The UAE has introduced amendments to the Commercial Companies Law (Federal Decree-Law No. 32 of 2021), modernizing the onshore corporate framework and bringing it closer to international standards.

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ROMANIA: 2026 brings a series of essential obligations for commercial companies in Romania arising from recent legislative amendments and from regulations whose compliance deadlines are now becoming due.

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INDONESIA: The Minister of Law of the Republic of Indonesia (MOL) has issued Regulation No. 49 of 2025 (“MOL 49”) on the Requirements and Procedures for the Establishment, Amendment, and Dissolution of Limited Liability Companies.

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ZIMBABWE: Zimbabwe has introduced a mandatory re-registration exercise requiring all companies and Private Business Corporations registered before the introduction of the electronic registry system to migrate to the new Companies and Other Business Entities Electronic Registry.

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SAUDI ARABIA: Saudi Arabia has introduced important regulation concerning corporate transparency and ownership disclosure.

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